I do not understand the reason for not having OAuth flow while using the measurement protocol. The user needs the track-id for sending the request, and there are possibilities of ghosting as well. So why is OAuth process not being used for authentication in Google Analytics. Could anybody help me in understanding this?
The measurement protocol is an http request to a URL with querystring parameters. It does not require authentication. I agree that the data can get dirty, however its operation is that.
Related
I am having some pages where I need to track page views and get data for reports. So I need to use some tracking events without using gtag.js.
I have tried solutions like GIF Request Parameters
But this solution was there in ga.js and its a legacy
The format used in your linked documentation is deprecated since Google introduced Universal Analytics in 2012.
However the current solution to send requests to Googke Analytics without a library, the Measurement Protocol, works broadly the same way. You have an endpoint (google-analytics.com/collect) and add the necessary parameters as described in the reference, depending on what kind of interaction you want to track. The endpoint returns a 200 http status and a gif (no matter if the request has actually been logged in analytics, this just confirms that you actually hit the server).
I'm using Google Calendar API in my application.
The problem that I faced is that Google doesn't send me Push-Notifications.
I setup my app here https://console.developers.google.com/
Verified domain: https://console.developers.google.com/apis/credentials/domainverification
Watched calendar: https://developers.google.com/calendar/v3/reference/calendarList/watch and got successful response.
However, having done all of this, no push-notifications are received by my web-hook. It seems that Google just doesn't send them. Maybe I missed some step? I use https URL.
The problem was that the URL that I used for PUSH-NOTIFICATIONS wasn't whitelisted and if it was requested from other network(e.g. Google), then the request couldn't be processed.
Therefore, if there is such a problem, consider checking your URL availability outside your network. It should be accessible from anywhere and by anyone.
I was checking GA Measurement Protocol to send data to GA from backend.Which is working fine.Url i am using is:
https://www.google-analytics.com/collect?tid=UA-XXXXXXX-1&v=1&cid=9350&dp=home&t=pageview
(Please replace UA-XXXXXXX-1 with your own tracking id.)
Now i have a website which is GA enabled using javascript way.I checked in Chrome inspect that it sends information to google through url:
https://stats.g.doubleclick.net/__utm.gif?utmwv=5.6.5dc&utms=4&utmn=1588741400&............
I can use this url too to send information to google from backend. What's special and new in Measurement Protocol because using this url too i can send data to google for analytics purposes?
I need to send data from backend to GA so please guide.
The measurement protocol is now the "backbone" for data collection for Universal Analytics for all versions (web, mobile etc). Unlike the gif-method it is well documented and it can be called from every device/programming language that can send http requests (it will still return a transparent gif, though).
The main reason for using the measurement protocol is that everything else is deprecated and Google has announced that support for older tracking methods will be dropped. It looks like your second example uses an older version of the Analytics tracking code, current versions send their calls to the https://www.google-analytics.com/collect endpoint. You should not invest a lot of effort in developing solutions based on deprecated technology, especially if it offers no advantages over the current versions.
Google measurement protocol is very useful when implementing distributed solution of a service like restful APIs.
The client is not known by the server, each client world wide can call the rest API so no javascript code is possible to be injected at the client.
Measurement protocol enabled us to track which kind of devices are calling our API, how many requests per endpoint, etc...
I am completely new to the Google Analytics Measurement protocol.
Trying to fetch the results and load it in iframe of an registered tid domain.
My query string looks something like this:
http://www.google-analytics.com/collect?v=1&tid=UA-XXX-1&cid=555&t=pageview&dp=%2Fauth"
But i get the response as : GIF89aÿÿÿÿ,D;
What am I doing anything wrong? I also tried passing domain name with it and its title. Still no success.
And also do I need to call this get or post from the origin domain or can I do it from Postman-Rest client?
I think your having an issue with understanding what the Measurement Protocol is.
You said:
Trying to fetch the results and load it in iframe of an registered tid
domain.
What the measurement protocol is for:
Measurement Protocol Overview
The Google Analytics Measurement Protocol allows developers to make
HTTP requests to send raw user interaction data directly to Google
Analytics servers.
The measurement protocol is for sending hits to Google Analytics, If you want to get your Google Analytics data out you use the Reporting API
Response
The response you are getting back from the measurement protocol is good it means it recorded your message. GIF89aÿÿÿÿ,D;
What you're seeing is the content of the 1x1 GIF pixel that Google Analytics uses, which you can safely ignore. As long as the response code of your request is 200, you should be fine.
The origin domain of the request doesn't matter; you can—for instance—also send Measurement protocol requests from server-side scripts and it still works.
I want to batch my requests to the Google Analytics Measurement Protocol
POST /collect HTTP/1.1
Host: www.google-analytics.com
payload_data
I'm developing in Unity 3D, but mainly I was curious if anyone had ideas so I can reduce the number of http requests from the client.
NOTE: I have no plans to use Googles Analytics SDK for Unity. Please do not suggest. I want to use the Measurement Protocol API.
Thanks,
NOTE: multipart/mixed might be a good solution, but I suspect the API needs to support it. Not sure if that is the case (at least not documented).
Seems like this should be a common problem though.
Google Analytics Measurement Protocol Batch Requests
You can batch multiple requests into a single post request.